Glastonbury
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Synopsis
Chronicles the evolution of the longest-running music festival in the world. In 1970, a young farmer named Michael Eavis opened his 150-acre farm to 1,500 people who paid one pound each to watch a handful of pop and folk stars perform all weekend long, and the Glastonbury Festival was born. The following year, several rich hippies, including Winston Churchill's granddaughter, provided funds to enlarge the event, and 12,500 people turned up to see David Bowie and Joan Baez. For most of the past 30 years, the Worthy Farm in Glastonbury has provided a delirious outdoor concert for thousands of people over the summer-solstice weekend at the end of June.
Director
Julien Temple
Cast
David Bowie
Oasis
Joe Strummer
Rolf Harris
Ray Davies
Nick Cave
Melanie
Richie Havens
David Gray
Alice Coltrane
Chris Anthony John Martin
Crew
Ben Challis
Hamish Doyne-ditmas
Ann Faggetter
Terry Flaxton
Liz Gallacher
Simon Gershon
Jane Hawley
Dave Henderson
Niven Howie
Demetri Jagger
Anna Kalnars
Florence Larsonneur
Gareth Llewellyn
Stephan Mallmann
Ben Meechan
Robert Richards
Tracey Scoffield
John Shearlaw
Matt Skelding
Ben Smithard
Ben Smithard
Jack Stew
Andrew Stirk
Amanda Temple
Julien Temple
Jeremy Thomas
Tobias Zaldua
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Articles
TCM Remembers Joe Strummer,1952-2002
Strummer was born John Mellor on August 21, 1952 in Ankara, Turkey, to a British diplomat. Unlike most of his punk contemporaries, Strummer was educated at a private school, but soon felt a strong desire to perform music. In 1976, he and guitarist-songwriter Mick Jones formed The Clash, releasing their first records the following year. The Clash quickly established themselves as one of the most potent bands in the UK punk explosion, releasing a string of scathing, explosive singles over the next few years: "White Riot", "London Calling", "Train in Vain (Stand by Me)", "Rock the Casbah" and "Should I Stay or Should I Go?" establishing them as one of the few bands to successfully combine raw political fervor with rancorous force and musical versatility.
The Clash would eventually disband in 1986, and Strummer soon found himself in the film industry when British filmmaker Alex Cox approached him to contribute to the soundtrack for the punk biopic Sid and Nancy (1986). A fruitful career in films followed and Strummer produced the music for Cox's irreverent historical drama Walker (1987) and Julian Schnabel's moving story of artist Jean-Michel Basquiat's short life in Basquiat (1996). Thanks to his snarling charisma, Strummer also found himself in front of the camera for some notable directors. He played a street thug in Martin Scorsese's The King of Comedy (1983); an amusing cameo in Alex Cox's spaghetti western spoof Straight to Hell (1987); and appeared in cult director Jim Jarmusch's wry comedy Mystery Train (1989) (as a British loner stranded in a Memphis motel) and Aki Kaurismaki's eerie mood pieceI Hired a Contract Killer (1990). Most impressively, Strummer's songs have been featured in several recent films: the John Cusack produced Grosse Pointe Blank (1997); Stephen Daldry's popular hit Billy Elliot (2000); and Wes Anderson's The Royal Tenenbaums (2001) - all prominently feature Joe Strummer's fiery vocals, coloring and propelling the movie in some manner. Strummer is survived by his wife Lucy, two daughters and a stepdaughter.
by Michael T. Toole
TCM Remembers Joe Strummer,1952-2002
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Released in United States January 2006
Released in United States on Video June 12, 2007
Released in United States Winter February 23, 2007
Released in United States January 2006 (Shown at Sundance Film Festival (World Cinema Documentary Competition) January 19-29, 2006.)
Released in United States Winter February 23, 2007
Released in United States on Video June 12, 2007